Pubdate: Tue, 20 Nov 2001 Source: Albuquerque Tribune (NM) Copyright: 2001 The Albuquerque Tribune Contact: http://www.abqtrib.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/11 Author: Andy Lenderman Note: Tribune reporter Kate Nash contributed to this report. Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?137 (Needle Exchange) CONTROVERSY ON SYRINGE EXCHANGE UNLIKELY TO WANE Albuquerque Police Department Capt. Gene Halliburton faced the angry Nob Hill Neighborhood Association gathering, armed with crime statistics and years of experience dealing with heroin addicts. "I'm sort of caught in the middle of this situation," Halliburton told the group Nov. 8, knowing most of the people there were fighting to get a needle exchange program driven out of their area. "I support the concept of needle exchange," Halliburton said, referring to research that shows it prevents the spread of deadly diseases like AIDS and hepatitis C, and prevents costly hits to an already strained health care system. But Halliburton also showed the parents, neighbors and business owners some alarming numbers. "While crime rates go down in other areas, they go up in Nob Hill and the University Heights Association," Halliburton said. His report said overall crime is up by more than 20 percent in trendy Nob Hill compared with last year. The City Council heard many of the same complaints from neighborhood residents and businesses Monday that Halliburton heard at the meeting earlier this month: gangs, drug dealers, drug addicts and prostitutes roaming the area, disturbing the residents and leaving the debris of drug addiction scattered everywhere, with the complaints centered on the Harm Reduction Center at 4120 Silver Ave. S.E. The council voted Monday night to effectively shut down the center by requiring that needle clinics move away from residential areas. The debate over needle exchange may change locales, but it almost certainly will not go away. Even a city councilor who voted to tighten restrictions on where needle exchange centers can be located acknowledged Monday's 9-0 vote might merely change the geography - not end the controversy - over the facilities. "I wonder if we're not just taking the problem and moving it from one part of the city to a different part," said outgoing City Councilor Alan Armijo, who nevertheless voted for the restrictions. The Harm Reduction Center opened about 18 months ago under the management of the nonprofit Health Care for the Homeless with funding by the state Department of Health. It's on the same block as a methadone clinic, which distributes that drug to addicts in an attempt to wean them from heroin. Neighbors in the area say the Harm Reduction Center attracted heroin dealers looking for a sure customer base around the center. "How do they get their money for their drugs?" resident Judy Pratt said. "They break into our houses and they break into our cars. All . . . the . . . time." Around the city, six organizations give out clean needles and other services to addicts through a $300,000 state grant, said Dr. Bruce Trigg, who manages a state Department of Health Clinic in the University Area. A loss of the clinics would mean disastrous consequences in the fight to contain HIV and hepatitis C - incurable diseases often spread by dirty heroin needles, health workers say. "The state Health Department would like to have many sites all over the city so that people don't congregate at one place," Trigg said in an interview. "None of the other places has ever had a complaint from anyone anywhere." Maureen Rule, clinical adviser at the Harm Reduction Center, explained how the center works: Addicts come into the center for the first time and are given a starter pack of 30 clean syringes for injecting heroin. For subsequent visits, addicts must bring used needles into the center in order to get new ones. Trigg said the centers also hand out sterile "cookers" - a device that helps distill heroin - plus water, tourniquets and referrals for drug rehabilitation services. "Syringe exchange is probably 25 percent of what we do there," Rule said. The drug users, many of whom are homeless, also can do their laundry and take a shower there. The theory is that drug addiction and homelessness are something that must be dealt with to prevent them from becoming worse. "We call it the intersection of public health and human rights," Trigg said. "We treat people from respect." At the Nov. 8 meeting at Highland High School, an assistant principal, a parent group representative, a school police officer and a basketball coach came with this message: Get this stuff away from our more than 2,000 students. Highland students are being hassled by users, and they're finding needles on campus when they clean the grounds, school Resource Officer Patricio Ruiloba said. "I need to protect my kids there," he said. Rule countered she, too, wants to protect kids - especially from AIDS and from life on the streets. The Nob Hill meeting concluded like a mirror image of the needle exchange program itself: no clear answers, few thoughts of compromise, plenty of passion and an outlook of long-term controversy. And a lot of people, like Halliburton, who feel caught in the middle. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth